Minimal intervention delivered by 2-1-1 information and referral specialists promotes smoke-free homes among 2-1-1 callers: a Texas generalisation trial
Autor: | Łucja T. Bundy, Michelle C. Kegler, Mel Hovell, Regine Haardörfer, Jo Ann A. Gutierrez Monroy, David Jobe, Matthew W. Kreuter, Patricia Dolan Mullen, Rebecca S. Williams, Lara S. Savas, Maria E. Fernandez |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Georgia Time Factors Health (social science) Referral Smoking Prevention Context (language use) Health Promotion Environment Coaching law.invention External validity 03 medical and health sciences Secondhand smoke 0302 clinical medicine Nursing Randomized controlled trial law Intervention (counseling) North Carolina Humans Medicine Single-Blind Method 030212 general & internal medicine Socioeconomic status health care economics and organizations Family Characteristics 030505 public health business.industry Prevention Smoking Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Hispanic or Latino Middle Aged Texas Telephone Black or African American Objective test Female Tobacco Smoke Pollution 0305 other medical science business Research Paper Follow-Up Studies |
Zdroj: | Tobacco Control |
DOI: | 10.17615/f2n8-mt29 |
Popis: | Background Replication of intervention research is reported infrequently, limiting what we know about external validity and generalisability. The Smoke Free Homes Program, a minimal intervention, increased home smoking bans by United Way 2-1-1 callers in randomised controlled trials in Atlanta, Georgia and North Carolina. Objective Test the programme's generalisability-external validity in a different context. Methods A randomised controlled trial (n=508) of English-speaking callers from smoking-discordant households (≥1 smoker and ≥1 non-smoker). 2-1-1 Texas/United Way HELPLINE call specialists serving the Texas Gulf Coast recruited callers and delivered three mailings and one coaching call, supported by an online tracking system. Data collectors, blind to study assignment, conducted telephone interviews 3 and 6 months postbaseline. Results At 3 months, more intervention households reported a smoke-free home (46.6% vs 25.4%, p |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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